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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not lose weight (when DP wants me to)?

57 replies

user1472422869 · 14/01/2017 11:51

Apologies for the long post. I think all the background info is relevant.

I have a history of eating disorders which started in my mid-teens but got worse in late teens, continuing from there. They were a mixture of binge eating and severe calorie restricting with extreme exercising, in nasty cycles. Eventually I managed to reach a generally stable, "healthy" slim weight, but was not achieving it by healthy means. I would binge-eat junk food, and counteract it by exercise and fasting (unless in the company of others, in which case I would fall in line with their patterns). My mind was always consumed with weight loss and calories, and I measured my worth according to whether or not I was thin. This was how I was throughout my early twenties, and coincided with when I started a relationship with DP (this becomes relevant later).

I've seen many nutritionists/dieticians/counsellors/doctors over the years, and in the last couple have found some who have been a great help following a point at which I had become very thin and had dangerously low blood pressure and messed up blood sugar levels. In the end, what has worked best is to accept that, in my case particularly, slim does not in and of itself mean healthy.

With guidance, for the last couple of years I have been eating regular, nutritious meals no matter what, and keeping fit through regular but controlled exercise. If I feel the urge to binge on top (and often I do), I do this, but don't then compensate through restricting diet or over-exercising. This has meant in the end that I am much fatter than I used to be (though not obese or near to being) but in fact I am fitter, and my blood pressure, blood sugar levels etc are all far healthier. My overall mood and concentration have vastly improved.

With difficulty I've accepted my new shape, remembering all the positives. On occasions when I've started controlling my diet to lose weight I feel the old obsessive thought processes coming back, and feel worried that I'd run a high risk of falling back into old patterns if I were to continue along this line.

Advice from professionals has been to remember the benefits of how I am now, to work with what I am able to do, and to remember that contrary to society's overall view, thin does not automatically equal healthy, and in my case I am much healthier as I am now. I have shared this with some supportive friends and also with my partner.

In an ideal world, I'd eventually be completely free from bingeing and would then lose the weight slowly without even thinking about it. I've had a lot of guidance with diet and eat very healthily (more or less Michael Moseley-esque, but without very low calorie intake as that's triggering for me), binges aside. However, DP has made comments about my weight, saying for example that it's "hard to believe" it is healthier for me to be as I am now than as I was in our first years, and saying he thinks I have set myself a "psychological trap, " and that I should question the validity of the advice I have been given.

I have found both these comments upsetting and triggering; obviously a reason all this happened in the first place is because I was in the mindset of thinking I would be judged according to whether or not I was thin, and DP is openly doing just that. The fact he is citing those earlier years (it is relevant at the time he did not know about the eating disorder) while dismissing advice I've received more recently makes me feel he is not taking any of it seriously.

I think it is more cluelessness than maliciousness on his part, so how can I get the message through to him? It irritates me hugely that he thinks he knows best on this when he will have nothing to go on except vague misconceptions, whereas I, through necessity, have read most things going on the topic and poured time and money into professional help. He says what I've been told is "weird," "contrary to everything [he's] heard," etc.

The way he left things was by saying, "clearly this is not something I can talk to you about in any way," which isn't at all what I want. I value being able to be open about issues with him and feeling supported; later, it's been noted that I "haven't take criticism very well recently," and I can only assume that applies to this.

I know everyone says this, but in general he's kind, giving, caring etc...I am sure you may raise your eyebrows, but bottom line Is I'd rather address this whole thing with DP than LTB.

Clearly, I have a problem with mental illness as this is what got me into this mess in the first place -- so am I, now, in my own mind-trap? I don't think I am, but based on all I've written above, what do you wise Mumsnetters think? Should I be looking into ways to lose weight? Or if not, how can I get DP to back me on this and understand how damaging those comments were, as well as getting on board with my new regime?

OP posts:
user1472422869 · 14/01/2017 18:26

Thank you, everyone, for taking the time to write to me about this. Your support and advice have been truly helpful. When I was writing, I was feeling very low, and vacillating between thinking he was awful and thinking he was right and that I was deluded in feeling I'd progressed.

I think taking him along to one of my appointments would be a good step, and I'm also going to see if I can root out documents showing in black and white what was going on in my body when I looked "healthy," though he seems to understand now having listened to me explain it to him at length this afternoon.

My weight's been stable for the last year and a bit since following this new advice, so I feel I have reached some sort of equilibrium which, while not ideal in a normative sense, is the best thing for me now. I hope he understands that.

In DP's defence, I was very good at hiding things in previous years (and in general still am) so he had no idea of what was going, and that coupled with preconceptions about what health looks like probably made it hard for him to grasp I truly was less well then than I am now, and also made it hard for him to truly see what a massive impact my eating disorder has had on my life. Also, he doesn't know much about the mediterranean diet so that may also be alien to him -- buying him a copy of BSD is a good idea.

I've had a long talk with DP and he knows now what the ramifications of what he said are, and I hope he truly understands (I had explained to him before but I don't think it sunk in -- grr; also because I talk in quite a matter-of-fact way I think he may have remained naive about the serious nature of eating disorders). I am sure his innate preference certainly is for me to be thinner (to those who ask, yes he has in the past heavily implied he prefers how I used to look to how I look now), but before he wasn't recognising the health dimension and now he does. He's said he prefers me as I am to me as the former ill version of myself. But if it comes again to him expressing his original sentiment, properly knowing the background and that by preferring the "thin" me, he's preferring that I'm ill, of course I won't stand for it. Thank you for giving me a massive confidence boost.

My heart goes out to those of you also struggling with an eating disorder. It is horrible, but in the last couple of years, I have seen that it really can improve.

OP posts:
user1472422869 · 14/01/2017 18:27

Also I have showed him my op and I think having it in writing helped him "get" it - thank you for that advice too, Manon.

OP posts:
HelenaDove · 14/01/2017 19:02

"yes he has in the past heavily implied he prefers how I used to look to how I look now"

OP It sounds like hes doing it in a drip drip drip way. Im a size 14 (down from a size 28) If someone even implied in a subtle way that it still wasnt enough i would leave.

I posted on another thread that ppl who read certain magazines sometimes think they know better than medical professionals. Although it doesnt help that the NHS is still peddling the low fat myth.
Which is very handy for your "D" P I suspect he is thinking of how he wants you to look on his arm as well as his own sexual gratification.

At best its mansplaining. At worst its manipulative and emotionally abusive.

dangermouseisace · 14/01/2017 20:29

Well done you OP.

It is hard getting through an eating disorder. When I was dangerously anorexic I would get frequent comments about how "lovely and slim I was" or women saying that they wished they could be as thin as me, when I was skeletal and my muscles and heart were breaking down. I think many many people who do not have eating disorders themselves have the wrong ideas in their heads about what is a healthy body shape. Maybe your DP is one of them.

You keep on as you are now. You are doing everything right Flowers

Blossomdeary · 14/01/2017 20:31

Take him with you to an appointment so he can ask his own questions and hear the rationale of the advice you have been given.

Isadora2007 · 14/01/2017 20:38

I used the flooded kitchen analogy for DH to "get" how dieting wasn't addressing my issues .

My kitchen is flooded. I get busy with the mop and mop the floor and empty the mop bucket and get the water off the floor. But the tap is dripping and dripping. Before long the floor is wet again.
That's what dieting when you have a binge eating disorder is like. I can lose weight by dieting but dieting actually helps keep the tap dripping.

I am Now hoping to stop the tap dripping and the floor can dry at its own rate.

Your floor is well on its way to being drier and you have stopped the tap!

user1472422869 · 16/01/2017 00:23

Isadora, that is a very helpful analogy. Thanks again to all.

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